. U ! . C . Library trials Dapt, Box 870 C,i Hill, N.C 275U S Women's Coordin 11 clor vwVe fr Freshman V.omcn's Coordinator will be n m H" Friday. &IaeIlC office on the Memoria "aninC f Grabam SSL Meciin SSL wiH nseti at 4:W ia Roland Parier II today. D 75 Years of Editorial Freedom Volume 75. Number 99 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY. FERRUARY 14, 19S3 Founded Februarv 23, 1S93 Magazine- Appears Ou Campus Today SLJ- 61) meto. JL ft c, ipTTTTfy tb Yr i 1 i w i ii i Ken D ... " Ml i OfT! o By LOUISE JENNINGS of The Dally Tar Heel Staff FOCUS, a new magazine which is a collection of Christian-oriented articles and artwork, will make its first ap pearance on campus today. The magazine was establish ed by a group of faculty, graduate students, and staff who are presenting previously published material which they feel is outstanding. According to the journal's editor, Stan Mattson, Focus was established "to further stimulate University interest in a biblically-oriented Chris tianity". Focus will go on sale today and tomorrow for 50 cents in Y-Oourt, Lenoir Hall, and the entrance to the Pine Room. It will be sold between 11:30 and 1:30. The (artwork in Focus is that of students from other cam puses. There are no ads since it is hoped that the publication will be supported by sales. Mattson is studying under a fellowship and is an assistant in the History Department. He is a graduate of State University of New York and received his Masters Degree from the University of Wisconsin, Members of the staff include Dr. Frederick P. Brooks, who is the advisor and Dale Saville, Associate Editor. Others are members of Focus 68, a group which has sponsored several religious lectures and discussions on campus. Marines Inch Way HUE, Vietnam American Marines doggedly fought their way inch4jy4nch up the streets of the northern half of Hue Tues day toward the Communist-held Citadel, (the tatered blue, red, and yellow Viet Cong flag flew above it. By noon Tuesday, the Leathernecks had advanced only 1,000 yards north from the Perfume River which divides the ancient imperial capital. North Vietnamese and Viet Cong farces, estimated between 400 land 600. met the Marine advance with massive rocket, mortar, machinegun and small arms fire. The Communists were dug in trenches and foxholes and fired down on the Marines from three-story windows in the Citadel. The Marines stormed ashore in the north half of the city from assault boats Sunday night and Monday. By Tuesday, the Leathernecks had 500 men on the north side of the river. SCLC Charges Slaughter In Riots ATLANTA The Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) charged Tuesday that the dead and wounded Negro students who rioted last week at Orangeburg, S.C., "were shot in the back and. . .many were wounded while lying on the ground." In a telegram to U. S. Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., demanded that "you act now to bring to justice the perpetrators of the largest armed assault undertaken under color cq) of law dn recent Southern history." "Evidence presented by eyewitnsses to the events in Orangeburg, S. C, shows tthat all the students were shot in the back and that many were wounded while lying on the ground," said the statement. Thant May Meet VC In Paris LONDON U. N. Secretary General Thant in a dramatic move Tuesday night postponed his return to New York to fly to Paris Wednesday, reportedly to talk to North Vietnamese or Viet Cong officials on his peace probe. Prime Minister Harold Wilson said the gap between U.S. and North Vietnamese positions was "very narrow" but "difficult" A spokesman at the U. N. Information Center said Thant would go to Paris "for further consultations." It was not known immediately if he had requested a con ference with President Charles de Gaulle or Vietnamese Com munists in what will be the fourth nation of his global peace journey. The sudden move by the U.N. secretary general prompted a flurry of speculation in diplomatic quarters that some progress had been made to bring the waning sides together. U.S. Sends Diplomat To Hanoi WASHINGTON Secretary of state Dean Rusk told Congressmen a week ago that a foreign emissary representing the United States was sent to Hanoi to try to get peace talks started, Rep. Hugh Carey, D-N.Y., said Tuesday. Rusk urged the 200 Congressmen at the briefing to keep the envoys mission secret, but Rep. Roman Pucinski, D-IIL, leaked the news last Sunday in Chicago. He said the secret mission had failed. - Carey who put further details on the record Tuesday, said Rusk told the lawmakers that American planes had refrained from bombing the Hanoi area to protect the envoy and to keep Phuc Yen airfield ' 'open for continuing communications." 'Carey did not identify the envoy. Jeither did Pucinski, because, he said, "we plan to continue using him as a go-between towards possible negotiations." Focus is published through the University YM-YWCA Press. It is the second publica tion by an independent group of graduate students and faculty. Lillabulero was a literary collection published earlier. Copies of Focus have been sent to 100 major universities, and it is hoped that it will be a permanent innovation, ac cording to Mattson. Focus 63 will present Dr. Dennis Kimaw who will deliver a series of three lectures this weekend entitled "God Is Not Dead Wor Has He Forgot ten." The lectures, which are open to the public, will be held in Dey Hall Friday at 8:00 p.m. and Saturday at 4:30 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. Dr. Kinlaw is a professor of Semitic Languages at Asbury Theological Seminary. Reifler- By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Dr. Clifford Reifler, Chief Psychiatrist of the University Health Service, t o 1 d the Judicial Committee Monday that the proposed drug policy "could be lived with." Ufr Dailii (Tar Ijrrl World News BRIEFS By United Pma international Up Hue Streets w I Judiciary Committee reviews drug - Mrug 'Could Be "The policy is good because it provides for medical con sultation without a judgment on the rightness or wrongness of drug use in the social order," said' Reifler. "Students who use drugs are forced into an educative pro cess. They come into contact with a medical person who has a knowledge, of drugs and can tell them the pharmocological, personal, social problems with drug use." Reifler said he considered medical consultation absolutely necessary with cases of drug use. "This allows circumstances to be - taken i n t o 4 con sideration," said Reifler. "This way we can see a person as an individual instead of an of fender." "I don't see drug offenders, I see people who have these drugs," said Reifler. "I think it's important that this policy requires medical care and arbitrary administrative ac tion." Reifler also praised the policy for enhancing the pat ient doctor approach to the ( problem. "For the first offense it will be strictly a student-doctor relationship, for the second of fense it will be a student-doc-tor-administrative board rela tionship," said Reifler. "This allows for protection of the in dividual." Reifler affirmed the in firmary's respect for the in dividual's privacy. WRC Seeks Freshman Coordinator Women's Residence Council will hold interviews f o r F r e s H m a n Coordinator, through Friday in the W.R.C. office at GM from 3-5 p.m. "The Freshman Coordinator works with all phases of freshman life and orientation throughout the year at UNC," said Candy Hodges, present Freshman Coordinator." Working with the Orientation Commission, she participates in the choice and training of freshman women counselors. As a member of WRC she serves as a link for the rule making body with the freshman women and is particularly concerned with freshman rules. Special pro grams throughout the .year, such as "Carolina Myth Ex ploded'' during orientation and "The Untaught Class", which was held this past December, are also under her direction. The proposed Freshman Booklet and Big Sister-Little Sister project are part of the Freshman Coordinator's con cern. The purpose of the Coordinator is to establish ef fective communication chan nels between freshman women, and communication between organizations concerned with freshman programs. All interested women are en couraged to sign up at the GM desk, or call Sharon Rose at 968-9169 or Candy Hodges at 963-9171. ......... Poiiicy OK Lived Witlr "All student contacts with the infirmary are kept con fidential," said Reifler." None are turned over to anyone.' "Short of the preservation of life there is no ethical con sideraition more dear to the medical profession than the privacy of the interaction between doctor and patient" Dr. Reifler told the Judicial Committee that he didn't think the student judiciary should handle drug abuse cases. "One of the things that make this policy work is the trust between my office and the ad ministration. This trust is the result of five years oL inr- teraotaon. A student court would change every year and this type of trust could not develop." Dr. Reifler said the proposed policy is not essentially dif Mot UDesi By SHARI WILLIS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Design failures were not responsible for the January ac cident of the student union con struction, Director of Graham Memorial Howard Henry told the Board of Directors at a regular meeting yesterday. Henry said that the accident was caused by failure in tem porary wooden supports used in puring the concrete. These DTH P 1 i i ( li 1 f' , ' ' This tower was erected in front of the Baptist Church on Franklin Street. The flying of the flags n top is the only reason the Boy Scouts" built it, except to demonstrate knot-tying ability. Building such a tower is usually a day-long project for even the most ef- ficient knot tiers. DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS policy ferent from the present policy of the adniinistration. The proposed drug policy provides a firm administrative , stand on drug use. The first of fender under the new policy would be treated by the Infirmary, the second would receive disciplinary action. AH . dlsdplinary action would be handled by a student-faculty- . administrative board. Sitterson To Visit .Granville Tonight j All residents of Granville East and West are reminded of the visit of Chancellor and Mrs. Sitterson tonight for din ner at 6 p.m. in the cafeteria as part of the Faculty Fellowship program. were erected by a sub-contractor. Completion of the building will not be delayed as much as first esitimated, Henry said. "The fallen material was easy to remove and the floor below was not damaged. If you can call an accident lucky, this was a lucky accident" Henry said that a barber shoo will be situated in the new IF building. . is the major user of the movie 1 equipment - Henry said he was at tempting to have an acoustical analysis made of Carmichael Auditorium to determine the oxtent and type of acoustical Staff pcoto by SAM WILLIAMS M By WAYNE HURDER of Tht Daily Tar Heel Staff Student Body President Bob Travis announced Tuesday the appointment of his special assistant Ken Day as the chief justice of the Student Govern ment Supreme Court. Travis also announced that three more vacancies will be filled in the next 10 days and that a bill establishing pro cedural rules will be presented to student Legislature shortly. Day's appointment has to, be confirmed by a two-thirds ma jority of legislature but Travis said there was "no question" that Day would be con firmed. Travis commented that Day "deserves more credit for what has happened in Student Government in the last two years than anyone else." Day "will establish the Supreme Court on a sound basis," Travis said. "The Court has never really been constituted on a sound basis," he said. "Drugs, women's rules, and the basis of the honor system atself are among the serious questions which' the student v judiciary must face shortly," Travis explained. Day wiH fil a vacancy left by Frank Hodges, former At torney General, who left school this semester. Currently, Cherie Lewis is presently the only member of the Court which is supposed to have five members. Travis expressed bis hope that in the future, under Day, "the court will be equal to the legislative and executive branch of Student Govern ment." - The courtj" esfablashed by a referendum on Dec. 13, 1966, was, created "for the express -purpose of providing a highly competent judicial tribunal to develop student policy on stu The new student union organization was named "Carolia Union" by the Board. The building itself is the Frank Porter Graham Building, nam ed by the trustees of the University several years ago. New movie projectors have, been installed for free flicks in f flrroll HalL The sound system has also been improved. These changes were financed largely bv Graham Memorial, since it treatment the building will, need. He hopes the treatment will reduce reverberations, making both speeches and music easier to hear, and basketball games more com fortable to attend. Mary Ann Fulton, chairman of the Graham Memorial Activities Board announced the concerts planned for February and March: tonight. Preservation Hall Jazz Band; . Feb. 20, Stop the World I Want To Get Off ; Feb. 22, Harkness Ballet; ' L March 6, Bobby Gentry and Glenn Campbell; March 14, The Mitch Ryder Show; March 30, Sam and Dave. Henry asked the Board to consider suggesting to the GMAB that it purchase a membership to the Friends of the College cultural series ia Raleigh. With this mem bership, GMAB could offer $7 tickets for $1 to students in terested in the series of pro grams that surpass the con certs available to Carolina. UNC doesnt have the faculties e money to present most 0f these programs, he said. The Board decided to pass this suggestion to the Activities Board. ami QM dent coies of conduct," Travis said. The Supreme Court, which was established in a referen dum Dec 13, 1966, is supposed to have "jurisdiction in con troversies concerning ex ecutive and legislative actions raising questions of law arising under this Constitution or laws enactedunder its authority," according to the bill setting up the court. The court also has apellate jurisdiction from all lower courts in cases where error of law under the Student Govern ment Constitution are alleged to have occurred. The apellate powers won't come into effect, however, un til the procedural rules are set. Travis said, in making the appointment that "no one is more aware than Ken Day, that certain elements in the University Administration are engaged in a never ending ef fort to erode the traditions of student self-government which have existed at this university since its founding." He added that "even these elements have developed! a high degree of respect for Ken because of his sound judge- Committee Fiinds Be Frozen may AH committees receiving funds from Student Legislature must turn in first semester reports as to their ef fectiveness and use of funds by Monday, Bob , Hunter, chairman of Student Legislature's Ways and Means Committee said Tuesday. If the reports are not turned to either Ken Starling, chairman of die Rules Com mittee, or Hunter by the deadline, the committees who have not reported will be sub ject to having their funds cut off. The reports can be turned in in the Student Government of fices, at the GM Information desk , or to Hunter or Starling in person. Only three committees have turned in their reports, ac cording to Hunter. The three are the Communications Com mittee, NSA Committee and the Campus Affairs Com mittee. The codification of Student Government rules states that the reports must be turned in to the Rules committee by the third week after the beginning of the semester. Hunter and Starling are combining the efforts of their committees since the codifica tion in two separate places, says that both the Rules and the Ways and Means Com mittees are responsible for the condensation of the reports and the presentation of the reports Pennsylvania Fan Phones For Scores Bill Currie, Carolina's "Mouth of the South" had competition from Graham Memorial Information Service during the State game Monday night Mike Cozza, who was work ing the desk Monday, gave a play-by-play of the game to a caller from Philadelphia. "I got tins call from Philadelphia," said Cozza, "and some guy asked what the final score of the game was. I told him the game wasn't over. Then ha asked if he could hang on, so I gave him a play-byplay of the last three minutes of the game." "When it was over, I told him the final score. He didn't seem either particularly over joyed or displeased." Cozza hastened to add that this would not be part of Gil's regular service. "We try to be polite at GM, but this sort of thing could get out of hand." ice - Travis Appoints Day ment and unwillingnness to compromise the ideals through which students may govern themselves, as well as his en viable record of academic achievement" Travis said that he appointed Day after consulting with leaders of both political parties, whom, he said, were "virtually unanimous" i n recommending Day. to the Student Legislature. Hunter said that the, reports will be used by the incoming officers who will be elected in the spring in making out their budgets for next year. He added, "I don't want to take anyone's money away, but if the committee heads don't turn in their reports, I'll have to." For a complete list of the committees which have not turned in reports see Page 5. SEP Conveys 4A Feeling Of Satisfaction' By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff "The main thing, you get from the Southern Education Program ds a feeling of satisfaction," said Charles Cherry, a graduate student in English and the UNC represen tative of SEP. "You get satisfaction from teaching students, who need it more than students who have better facilities," said Cherry. "You take away a lot more from the program than you bring to it" The Southern Education pro gram is a private, non-profit educational organization form ed to place qualified graduate students and teachers as in structors i n predominantly Negro colleges. The SEP places instructors in Negro colleges for summer school or for one academic year. Most of the applicants to the program have a master's degree. Applicants are placed by SEP, but the school pays the instructor according to their individual pay scales. Cherry said most schools also take care of room and board. The program b designed to help Negro colleges fill teaching vacancies created by professors taking summer sab baticals. "These schools find it a little more -difficult to replace teachers." said Cherry. Students interested in the program should contact Cherry in 203 Bingham The program receives finan cial support from the Carnegie Corporation and the Ford Foundation. These funds are used to pay administrative fees, orientation programs and .travel grants. The SEP circulates "the credentials of its applicants to the colleges on its maBisg list. The colleges then select tie applicants who best meet their specific needs.

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